Global Eye
Philosopher's Stone
By Chris Floyd
Published: November 3, 2005
Last week, a legal thunderbolt struck at
the heart of the grubby
conspiracy that led the United States and Britain into an illegal war
of aggression against Iraq. But this searing blow didn't fall in
Washington, where a media frenzy raged over a White House indictment,
but in southern England, in a military courtroom, where a lone soldier
stood against the full force of the great war-crime enterprise, armed
only with a single, rusty, obsolete weapon: the law.
While Potomac courtiers were reading the entrails of the cooked goose
of Scooter Libby -- the first Bushist honcho caught in the
slow-grinding gears of special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's
investigation -- in Wiltshire, Flight Lieutenant Malcolm Kendall-Smith
faced a court martial after declaring that the Iraq war was illegal and
refusing to return for his third tour of duty there, The Guardian
reports.
He has been charged with four counts of
"disobeying a lawful command." But Kendall-Smith, a decorated medical
officer in the Royal Air Force, says that his study of the recently
revealed evidence about the lies, distortions and manipulations used to
justify the invasion has convinced him that both the war and the
occupation are "manifestly illegal." Thus any order arising from this
criminal action is itself an "unlawful command," The Sunday Times
reports. In fact, the RAF's own manual of law compels him to refuse
such illegal orders, Kendall-Smith insists.
The flight lieutenant is no ordinary war protester, and no shirker of
combat -- unlike, say, the pair of prissy cowards at the head of the
U.S.-British "coalition." Kendall-Smith, who has dual New
Zealand-British citizenship -- and a pair of university degrees in
medicine and Kantian moral philosophy -- has served three tours at the
front in Afghanistan and Iraq. He is not claiming any conscientious
objections against war in general, nor do religious scruples play any
part in his stance. It is based solely on the law.
Central to his case are the sinister backroom legal dealings between
London and Washington in the days before the invasion. Less than two
weeks before the initial "shock and awe" bombings began slaughtering
civilians across Iraq, Lord Goldsmith, the British attorney general,
gave Prime Minister Tony Blair a detailed briefing full of doubts and
equivocations about the legality of the coming war, adding that
Britain's participation in an attack unsanctioned by the United Nations
would "likely" lead to "close scrutiny" by the International Criminal
Court for potential war crimes charges, The Observer reports.
But Blair and Goldsmith withheld this report from Parliament, the
Cabinet and British military brass, who were demanding a clear-cut
legal sanction for the impending action. Then, just three days before
the bloodletting began, Goldsmith suddenly produced another paper, this
time for public consumption: a brief, clear, unequivocal statement that
the invasion would be legal. This statement was almost certainly
crafted in Washington, where Goldsmith had recently been "tutored" by
the Bush gang's consiglieres, including the legal advisers to
Colin Powell, Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza Rice.
Leading this pack of war-baying legal beagles was George W. Bush's top
counsel, Alberto Gonzales, who had overseen the White House's own
efforts to weasel out of potential war crimes charges by declaring --
without any basis in Anglo-American jurisprudence or the U.S.
Constitution -- that Bush was not bound by any law whatsoever in any
military action he undertook: a blank check for aggression, murder and
torture that Bush has gleefully cashed over and over. Alberto and the
boys leaned hard on Goldsmith, who finally caved in and replicated the
Americans' contorted and specious legal arguments for launching the
attack.
Of course, Kendall-Smith knew none of this during his first two tours
in Iraq: Goldsmith's Bush-induced backflip was only divulged in April
2005. Nor did he know then of the "Downing Street Memos," the "smoking
gun" minutes that record Blair's inner circle dutifully lining up
behind Bush's hell-bent drive for war -- as far back as 2002 -- and
their conspiracy with the Bush gang to manipulate their countries into
war. The memos, which emerged in May 2005 and have never been denied or
repudiated by the British government, show Blair's slavish acquiescence
in Bush's criminal scheme to "fix the facts and the intelligence around
the policy" of unprovoked military aggression. Confronted with this new
evidence -- and revelations about the mountain of doubts expressed by
U.S. intelligence before the invasion but deliberately ignored by the
Bushist war party -- Kendall-Smith took the only honorable course for a
soldier who has been duped into serving an evil cause.
The
moral rigor of his defiance has sent tremors through the British
military establishment, already shaken by the strange, unexplained
shooting deaths of two military inspectors investigating atrocity
allegations in Iraq, The Guardian reports. British brass are panicky
about the Goldsmith revelations; indeed, the leader of the British
invasion force, Admiral Michael Boyce, said that he now believed his
country's military did not have "the legal cover necessary to avoid
prosecution for war crimes," The Observer reports. Boyce added that if
he and his officers were eventually put on trial for waging aggressive
war, he'd make sure that Blair and Goldsmith were in the dock beside
them.
Bush, Blair and their minions have committed a monstrous crime, and
they know it -- hence all the convolutions, before the war and after,
to inoculate themselves from prosecution. But with Kendall-Smith and
Fitzgerald, the long-moribund figure of the law is re-awakening. It's
weak, it's bleary, it certainly might fail. But now the conspirators
will have to live cowering in its shadow for the rest of their days.
Annotations
RAF Doctor Stands by Decision to Refuse to Serve in
'Illegal' Iraq War
The Guardian, Oct. 28, 2005
Applauding a Military Refusenik
New Statesman, Oct. 31, 2005
Iraq War Objector a Thinker, Friends Say
Sunday Star-Times, Oct. 23, 2005
RAF Officer Faces Jail for Refusing to Return to Iraq
Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Oct.
21, 2005
RAF Officer Faces Jail Over 'Illegal War'
The Sunday Times, Oct. 16, 2005
British Military Chief Reveals new Legal Fears Over Iraq
war
The Observer, May 1, 2005
Complete Set of Downing Street Documents
AfterDowningStreet.org, July 18, 2005
British Forces Feel Pressure from Abuse Claims
The Guardian, Oct. 17, 2005
Senior Military Investigator Found Dead in Iraq
The Independent, Oct. 17, 2005
Senior Officers Tried to Block Iraq Killing Investigation'
The Guardian, Oct. 12, 2005
International Court Hears Anti-war Claims
The Guardian, May 6, 2005
The Secret Way to War
New York Review of Books, June 9, 2005
Colin Powell: The Most Honest Man on Earth
A Tiny Revolution, Oct. 11, 2005
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